Schapiro to Exit SEC, Walter Named Chairman

The Securities and Exchange Commission announces that Chairman Mary Schapiro will resign in December.

Updated with comments from Lawrence D. Kaplan, of counsel in the Corporate practice of Paul Hastings in Washington, and Frank A. Mayer, III, a partner in the Financial Services Practice Group of Pepper Hamilton LLP, in the firm's Philadelphia office.

President Obama said that he was "pleased to designate Elisse Walter as SEC Chairman after Mary's departure. I'm confident that Elisse's years of experience will serve her well in her new position, and I'm grateful she has agreed to help lead the agency."

Walter was appointed by President George W. Bush to the Commission in 2008 served as acting chairman during January 2009, according to the SEC web site.

Schapiro, who became the SEC Chairman in January 2009, said in a press release Monday called her experience "incredibly rewarding," and touted "a record number of enforcement actions," as the agency "engaged in one of the busiest rulemaking periods, and gained greater authority from Congress to better fulfill our mission."

Major enforcement actions by the SEC during Schapiro's tenure have included the October 2010 settlement of a lawsuit against former Countrywide Financial CEO Angelo Mozilo, who agreed to pay $22.5 million to "settle SEC charges that he and two other former Countrywide executives misled investors as the subprime mortgage crisis emerged." Mozilo also agreed to "$45 million in disgorgement of ill-gotten gains to settle the SEC's disclosure violation and insider trading charges against him." Bank of America ( BAC) purchased Countrywide in 2008.

Earlier in 2010, Judge Jed S. Rakoff of the Southern District of New York approved the SEC's $150 million settlement with Bank of America over charges that the bank had mislead investors leading up to its acquisition of Merrill Lynch in January 2010. Rakoff had rejected an earlier, smaller settlement.

Another very high profile success for Schapiro was the successful outcome of criminal charges against Galleon Group and its founder Raj Rajaratnam for insider trading. Rajaratnam was convicted in May 2011 of all 14 insider trading charges against him, and sentenced to 11 years in prison.

The SEC said that under Schaprio's leadership, the agency "has brought more enforcement actions than ever before, including 735 enforcement actions in fiscal year 2011 and 734 actions in FY 2012."

Schapiro also oversaw "one of the busiest rulemaking periods in decades," as the agency worked to implement the Dodd Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, signed into law by President Obama in August 2010.

The SEC said that because of Dodd-Frank, it has "implemented a new whistleblower program, strengthened regulation of asset-backed securities, laid the foundation for an entirely new regulatory regime for the previously-unregulated derivatives market, and required advisers to hedge funds and other private funds to register and be subject to SEC rules."